While Gov. Phil Murphy expressed serious doubt about President Donald Trump’s plan to have the U.S. “opened up and raring to go by Easter,” Murphy also announced Wednesday that several types of businesses in New Jersey forced to close during the coronavirus pandemic can re-open.

The stores that can again welcome customers include: mobile phone retail and repair shops; bicycle shops, but only to provide service and repairs; livestock feed stores; nurseries and garden stores and farming equipment stores.

In an appearance on CNN, Murphy said that if Trump announces closed U.S. businesses are permitted to re-open when science doesn’t show that’s ready to happen, he’ll keep in place the restrictive measures he’s instituted in New Jersey.

Meanwhile, the number of coronavirus cases in New Jersey swelled to 3,675 with 44 deaths - the largest single day jump in deaths since the virus arrived in the state earlier this month. New Jersey has the second highest number of coronavirus cases in the nation after New York.

A look at recent coronavirus news from New Jersey and around the nation:

N.J. health officials reveal negative test results for the first time: Officials said Tuesday that 27% of the people tested for the coronavirus in New Jersey have been positive for COVID-19. The state has data for 12,000 tests conducted so far, though they’re still trying to get information about 8% of tests being done in labs. The information could be key in predictive modeling to determine how many hospital beds New Jersey could need for seriously ill patients.

New coronavirus test could provide results in less than an hour: Rutgers researchers are testing a new, much faster COVID-19 test that could revolutionize the way medical personnel test for the coronavirus. If all goes well, the test could be completed in about 45 minutes at a hospital, instead of being sent to a laboratory that may take five days or more for a result, according to a statement from Rutgers New Jersey Medical School.

$2 trillion aid deal reached by White House, legislators: The White House and Senate leaders of both major political parties announced agreement early Wednesday on unprecedented emergency legislation to rush sweeping aid to businesses, workers and a health care system slammed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The urgently needed $2 trillion pandemic response measure is the largest economic rescue measure in history and is intended as a weeks-long or months-long patch for an economy spiraling into recession and a nation facing a potentially ghastly toll.

Number of U.S. coronavirus cases: The U.S. had 55,225 cases with 802 deaths as of 7 a.m. Wednesday, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.